Categorias:
Carrinho de compras 0

Serviço indisponível no momento.

Thomas Fey|MENDELSSOHN, Felix: Symphonies, Vol.  3 (Fey) - String Symphonies Nos. 1, 2, 3, 4, 9 (Felix Mendelssohn)

MENDELSSOHN, Felix: Symphonies, Vol. 3 (Fey) - String Symphonies Nos. 1, 2, 3, 4, 9 (Felix Mendelssohn)

Felix Mendelssohn

Disponível em
16-Bit/44.1 kHz Estéreo

Streaming ilimitado

Escute agora este álbum em alta qualidade nos nossos aplicativos

Iniciar meu período de teste e começar a escutar este álbum

Curta este álbum nos aplicativos Qobuz com a sua assinatura

Assinar

Curta este álbum nos aplicativos Qobuz com a sua assinatura

Idioma disponível: inglês

German conductor Thomas Fey and his Heidelberger Sinfoniker have made a name for themselves with historically oriented performances of Haydn, Mozart, and Beethoven, often featuring very quick tempi and sharp articulation along with period brasses. They're startling and bracing performances, and, when applied to Mendelssohn, the effect is even more unusual. For many listeners it will be sharply at odds with what they're expecting to hear. Is this because Fey has finally gone too far, or simply because Mendelssohn's music has been encrusted from the start with Victorian sentimentalism and was especially ripe for reinterpretation? Fey makes a good case for the latter. His earlier Mendelssohn discs programmed early string symphonies along with one of the composer's five mature symphonies, but this one is entirely devoted to the string symphonies, composed when Mendelssohn was between 11 and 13 years old. Instead of a fragile hothouse prodigy, Mendelssohn here appears as an ambitious young genius with Beethoven on his mind. Fey digs into the contrapuntal writing, totally divesting it of any scholastic qualities, and he imbues the minor-key pieces with a weighty air of drama. He makes some questionable choices (as he usually does); the outer movements of the String Symphony No. 2 in D major (tracks 4-6) have a nervous quality, and in his attempt to delineate the newly expanded dimensions in the concluding String Symphony No. 9 in C major, he offers not one of his characteristic quick tempos but a ponderously slow one in the Allegro section of the opening movement. Along the way, however, are numerous passages in which the young Mendelssohn seems almost palpably to be growing into his adult musical languages. Fey is a conductor capable of rethinking a composer's style from the ground up, and producing results that make sense. He has generally done so here. The results, in works often treated as something to play while the audience gets settled in their seats, are not even remotely dull, but listeners should sample here to make sure they know what they're getting into.
© TiVo

Mais informações

MENDELSSOHN, Felix: Symphonies, Vol. 3 (Fey) - String Symphonies Nos. 1, 2, 3, 4, 9 (Felix Mendelssohn)

Thomas Fey

launch qobuz app Já baixei o Qobuz para Windows / MacOS Abrir

download qobuz app Ainda não baixei o Qobuz para Windows / MacOS Baixar o aplicativo Qobuz

Você está escutando amostras.

Escute mais de 100 milhões de músicas com um plano de streaming ilimitado.

Escute esta playlist e mais de 100 milhões de músicas com os nossos planos de streaming ilimitado.

A partir de R$ 21,60/mês

1
I. Allegro
00:04:36

Thomas Fey, Conductor - Thomas Fey, Conductor

2
II. Andante
00:04:16

Thomas Fey, Conductor - Thomas Fey, Conductor

3
III. Allegro
00:02:46

Thomas Fey, Conductor - Thomas Fey, Conductor

4
I. Allegro
00:03:54

Thomas Fey, Conductor - Thomas Fey, Conductor

5
II. Andante
00:04:51

Thomas Fey, Conductor - Thomas Fey, Conductor

6
III. Allegro
00:02:06

Thomas Fey, Conductor - Thomas Fey, Conductor

7
I. Allegro di molto
00:03:39

Thomas Fey, Conductor - Thomas Fey, Conductor

8
II. Andante
00:03:11

Thomas Fey, Conductor - Thomas Fey, Conductor

9
III. Allegro
00:02:17

Thomas Fey, Conductor - Thomas Fey, Conductor

10
I. Grave - Allegro
00:03:32

Thomas Fey, Conductor - Thomas Fey, Conductor

11
II. Andante
00:03:50

Thomas Fey, Conductor - Thomas Fey, Conductor

12
III. Allegro vivace
00:02:30

Thomas Fey, Conductor - Thomas Fey, Conductor

13
I. Grave - Allegro
00:11:03

Thomas Fey, Conductor - Thomas Fey, Conductor

14
II. Andante
00:07:33

Thomas Fey, Conductor - Thomas Fey, Conductor

15
III. Scherzo
00:03:11

Thomas Fey, Conductor - Thomas Fey, Conductor

16
IV. Allegro vivace
00:08:52

Thomas Fey, Conductor - Thomas Fey, Conductor

Resenha do Álbum

German conductor Thomas Fey and his Heidelberger Sinfoniker have made a name for themselves with historically oriented performances of Haydn, Mozart, and Beethoven, often featuring very quick tempi and sharp articulation along with period brasses. They're startling and bracing performances, and, when applied to Mendelssohn, the effect is even more unusual. For many listeners it will be sharply at odds with what they're expecting to hear. Is this because Fey has finally gone too far, or simply because Mendelssohn's music has been encrusted from the start with Victorian sentimentalism and was especially ripe for reinterpretation? Fey makes a good case for the latter. His earlier Mendelssohn discs programmed early string symphonies along with one of the composer's five mature symphonies, but this one is entirely devoted to the string symphonies, composed when Mendelssohn was between 11 and 13 years old. Instead of a fragile hothouse prodigy, Mendelssohn here appears as an ambitious young genius with Beethoven on his mind. Fey digs into the contrapuntal writing, totally divesting it of any scholastic qualities, and he imbues the minor-key pieces with a weighty air of drama. He makes some questionable choices (as he usually does); the outer movements of the String Symphony No. 2 in D major (tracks 4-6) have a nervous quality, and in his attempt to delineate the newly expanded dimensions in the concluding String Symphony No. 9 in C major, he offers not one of his characteristic quick tempos but a ponderously slow one in the Allegro section of the opening movement. Along the way, however, are numerous passages in which the young Mendelssohn seems almost palpably to be growing into his adult musical languages. Fey is a conductor capable of rethinking a composer's style from the ground up, and producing results that make sense. He has generally done so here. The results, in works often treated as something to play while the audience gets settled in their seats, are not even remotely dull, but listeners should sample here to make sure they know what they're getting into.
© TiVo

Sobre o álbum

Melhorar as informações do álbum
Mais sobre o Qobuz
Por Thomas Fey

MENDELSSOHN, Felix: Symphonies, Vol. 5 (Fey) - Symphony No. 3, "Scottish" / String Symphony No. 11

Thomas Fey

HAYDN, J.: Symphonies, Vol. 8 (Fey) - Nos. 41, 44, 47

Thomas Fey

Playlists

Você também pode gostar...

J.S. Bach: Goldberg Variations

Víkingur Ólafsson

J.S. Bach: Goldberg Variations Víkingur Ólafsson

Rachmaninoff: The Piano Concertos & Paganini Rhapsody

Yuja Wang

Beethoven and Beyond

María Dueñas

Beethoven and Beyond María Dueñas

A Symphonic Celebration - Music from the Studio Ghibli Films of Hayao Miyazaki

Joe Hisaishi

Chopin: Piano Sonata No. 2, Op. 35 "Funeral March" - Beethoven: Piano Sonata No. 29, Op. 106 "Hammerklavier"

Beatrice Rana